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  • July 1, 1855
  • Page 17
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 1, 1855: Page 17

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Untitled Article

magnetism from the eyery-day exhibition of man ' s natural capacities With more ethereal bodies , with the highest possible tension of the perceptive powers , we can conceive of a race of beings of which our Euclids and Archimedes , our Liebigs , Faradays , and Hersehels , are but the lowest steps in a higher order of gradation . With such

breadth of conception on the basis of natural science , a corresponding one will give us gladsome pictures of the home of the greatest master of art . A planet without a hovel ; every building fashioned to the truest standard of purity of taste ; every man existing with the most rigid attention to natural and moral laws . Poetry penned by powers exceeding Dante and Milton , and sung with the harmony of seraphic choirs .

But from this height of speculation , an unpoetie philosopher , as a cruel falcon , would bring us down , for our mood for this time is not hard argument , and we escape from our cold-iiatured friend . We will assume that man , the inhabitant of this globe , in his highest sphere of intellect , is only the lowest link in the chain of mind ; to illustrate which , our readers will pardon our quoting Milton , who having been made to confirm many dogmas , may reasonably be advanced in our

support : — " O Adam ! one Almighty is , from whom All things proceed , and up to him return , But more refined , more spirituous and pure , As nearer to him placed or nearer tending , Each in . their several active spheres assigned , Till body up to spirit work , in bounds Proportioned to its kind . "

But here we will inquire why we venture to speculate at all ? Sir John Herschel asks , " Tor what purpose are we to suppose such magnificent bodies scattered through the abyss of space ? Surely , not to illuminate our nights , which an additional moon of the thousandth part of the size of our own would do much better—not to sparkle as a pageant void of meaning and reality , and bewilder us among vain conjectures . Useful , it is true they are to man , as

points of exact and permanent reference : but he must have studied astronomy to little purpose , who can suppose man to be the only object of his Creator ' s care , or who does not see , in the vast and wonderful apparatus around us , provision for other races of animated beings . The planets derive their light from the sun ; but that cannot be the case with the stars . These , doubtless , are themselves suns , and may perhaps , each in its sphere , be the presiding centre round which other planets , or bodies of which we can form no conception from any analogy offered by our own system , may he circulating . "

Sir David Brewster says , " Man , intellectual , moral , and spiritual , may or may not be an inhabitant of Jupiter , But the question does not relate to man at all . We contend that Jupiter , with the shape of our earth , its days and nights , its seasons and climates , its tides and its moons , and its atmosphere , is fitted for the reception of inhabitants , and that we are entitled to believe that it has been , or is , or will bo occupied with intellectual races ; but of what physical vol . i . 3 I

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-07-01, Page 17” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01071855/page/17/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
ART. Article 40
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 41
LODGES OF INSTRUCTION Article 60
ST. MARTIN'S HALL, LONG ACRE. Article 39
A FLIGHT. Article 25
A POETICAL ANSWER IS REQUESTED TO THE FOLLOWING ENIGMA. Article 26
APHORISMATA MASONICA. Article 27
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 28
masonic songs-no. 1. Article 37
ON HEARING A LITTLE CHILD SAY THE LORD'S PRAYER. Article 37
MUSIC. Article 38
SPECULATIVE RAMBLES AMONGST THE STARS. Article 15
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. Article 20
PROGRESS. Article 1
NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH. Article 9
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 43
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 43
METROPOLITAN Article 44
PROVINCIAL Article 45
FRANCE. Article 57
GERMANY. Article 57
COLONIAL Article 59
NOTICE. Article 63
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS FOR JULY. Article 60
CHAPTERS OF INSTRUCTION Article 61
Obituary Article 62
LIFE AND DEATH. Article 62
NEW POSTAL REGULATIONS. Article 63
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 63
ERRATUM. Article 64
ANIMAL AND HUMAN INSTINCT. Article 6
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Page 17

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Untitled Article

magnetism from the eyery-day exhibition of man ' s natural capacities With more ethereal bodies , with the highest possible tension of the perceptive powers , we can conceive of a race of beings of which our Euclids and Archimedes , our Liebigs , Faradays , and Hersehels , are but the lowest steps in a higher order of gradation . With such

breadth of conception on the basis of natural science , a corresponding one will give us gladsome pictures of the home of the greatest master of art . A planet without a hovel ; every building fashioned to the truest standard of purity of taste ; every man existing with the most rigid attention to natural and moral laws . Poetry penned by powers exceeding Dante and Milton , and sung with the harmony of seraphic choirs .

But from this height of speculation , an unpoetie philosopher , as a cruel falcon , would bring us down , for our mood for this time is not hard argument , and we escape from our cold-iiatured friend . We will assume that man , the inhabitant of this globe , in his highest sphere of intellect , is only the lowest link in the chain of mind ; to illustrate which , our readers will pardon our quoting Milton , who having been made to confirm many dogmas , may reasonably be advanced in our

support : — " O Adam ! one Almighty is , from whom All things proceed , and up to him return , But more refined , more spirituous and pure , As nearer to him placed or nearer tending , Each in . their several active spheres assigned , Till body up to spirit work , in bounds Proportioned to its kind . "

But here we will inquire why we venture to speculate at all ? Sir John Herschel asks , " Tor what purpose are we to suppose such magnificent bodies scattered through the abyss of space ? Surely , not to illuminate our nights , which an additional moon of the thousandth part of the size of our own would do much better—not to sparkle as a pageant void of meaning and reality , and bewilder us among vain conjectures . Useful , it is true they are to man , as

points of exact and permanent reference : but he must have studied astronomy to little purpose , who can suppose man to be the only object of his Creator ' s care , or who does not see , in the vast and wonderful apparatus around us , provision for other races of animated beings . The planets derive their light from the sun ; but that cannot be the case with the stars . These , doubtless , are themselves suns , and may perhaps , each in its sphere , be the presiding centre round which other planets , or bodies of which we can form no conception from any analogy offered by our own system , may he circulating . "

Sir David Brewster says , " Man , intellectual , moral , and spiritual , may or may not be an inhabitant of Jupiter , But the question does not relate to man at all . We contend that Jupiter , with the shape of our earth , its days and nights , its seasons and climates , its tides and its moons , and its atmosphere , is fitted for the reception of inhabitants , and that we are entitled to believe that it has been , or is , or will bo occupied with intellectual races ; but of what physical vol . i . 3 I

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